About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia. Pages: 41. Chapters: Dissolution of Eternity, Quake bosses, Quake characters, Quake enemies, Quake hazards, Quake levels, Quake powerups, Quake videos, Quake weapons, Scourge of Armagon, Episodes of Quake, Quake Wikia, Chthon, Shub-Niggurath, Vore, Ranger, Shub-Niggurath, Death Knight, Enforcer, Fiend, Grunt, Knight, Ogre, Rotfish, Rottweiler, Scrag, Shambler, Spawn, Vore, Zombie, Falling Spike, Guillotine, Laser Trap, Lava, Movable Wall, Nail Trap, Quake, Radioactive Container, Slime, Teleporter, Water, Wind Tunnel, Base, Medieval, Runic, Shub-Niggurath's Pit, Welcome to Quake, Biosuit, Green Armor, Key, Megahealth, Pentagram of Protection, Quad Damage, Quake, Red Armor, Ring of Shadows, Rune, Yellow Armor, Quake, Axe, Double-Barrelled Shotgun, Grenade Launcher, Nailgun, Quake, Rocket Launcher, Shotgun, Super Nailgun, Thunderbolt. Excerpt: Quake is divided into four episodes of 6 to 7 separate maps. The player must complete each map by getting from the start to finish to complete an episode before moving onto the next. The four episodes can be completed in any order but it is best to go from 1 to 4 as they get more difficult through the numerical order. Once all Episodes are completed and the player holds the four runes, the final level of the game will open, allowing the player to take on the witch-goddess, Shub-Niggurath. Quake was the next major game to be released by id Software after the success of Doom. The first release was on June 22, 1996. On February 24, 1996 the multiplayer demo, Qtest, was released. On modern computers Quake may have trouble working, if so see the article about Quake on XP. Quake 2 is the the sequel to Quake (albeit in name only) and was released on December 9, 1997. Like Doom, it was a first person shooter and was clearly influenced by Doom in its style of gameplay, design, and story. For example, Quake features a similar arsenal of weapons as well as teleporters. Features original to Qua...